The robot is actually a chatbot - a computer programme that uses artificial intelligence to engage in a realistic human conversation. Joshua’s creation takes people through a series of questions to determine whether their appeal has merit and guides them through the appeals process. It has resulted in over 160,000 overturned parking fines in London and New York, which is about $4 million.

His creations are solving a very real problem: how you can make the experience of using public services easier. It’s rarely a seamless process and the issue often starts at the beginning: where do you go to for help?

For simple things like complaining about a noisy neighbour, it’s usually fairly simple. You call up your council’s central number, answer a few questions, provide some contact details, hang up and wait for something to be done.

Services such as Fixmystreet and Love Lewisham - both now several years old - make the reporting of simple public realm issues such as potholes or fly-tipping easy.

Social media is also a useful channel. In the past I’ve used Twitter to report racist graffiti or ask whether children's play facilities are open. The response has often been timely.

But if your needs are multiple and complex you’ll need some well-honed investigative skills to find the right support. Many people don’t know where to start and go the wrong place. If they are lucky they get pointed in the right direction. If unlucky, then they are met with a deadend.

Will chatbots be the answer?

Services such as Citizens Advice and helplines such as The Mix, which helps young people understand their problems and find appropriate services, help people navigate this complexity. Many councils also have ‘one stop shops’ - physical spaces where you can go and hopefully be pointed in the right direction.

These are valuable, often oversubscribed services. But they are resource intensive for public and charitable bodies and time consuming for the user.

The ‘robot lawyer’ seems to point us in a new direction. If chatbots can help with parking fines and homelessness, can they help us with the other problems - including the complex ones - that rely on us finding and using an appropriate public service?

The Singaporean government is beginning to experiment and has signed a deal with Microsoft. It will start with chatbots answering simple factual questions but they aim to eventually have them responding to personalised queries from users.

This vision certainly feels possible. Organisations like Citizens Advice and The Mix, as well as local authorities and other public bodies, have lots of data about the needs of their service users. This data could be used to build the artificial intelligence that makes chatbots an effective option for at least a proportion of their service users.

Can we expect this to happen anytime soon?

Whilst it might be possible, our public services are rarely at the vanguard of technological development or deployment. Many back-office systems are still archaic and even those with the desire to innovate are often hamstrung by existing IT contracts or a lack of investment in transformation. We shouldn’t expect it to happen anytime soon.

This leads us back to Joshua Browder. If our public services can only adopt technological innovations at a glacial pace, it will it be down to people like him to create the tools we need to navigate our public services in the 21st century.

Stay up to date

Get our weekly newsletter and tailor your updates on our programmes, events and research

Stay up to date

Join our mailing list to receive updates about Nesta’s work, including the regular Nesta newsletter and tailored information on jobs, funding opportunities, programme updates, new research and publications, event invites and the occasional requests to take part in research or surveys - based on your interests.

Sign up for our newsletter

I'm interested in
*

Education

Creative economy

Government innovation

Innovation policy

Health

Futurescoping

Challenge prizes

Impact investment

You can unsubscribe by clicking the link in our emails where indicated, or emailing [email protected]. Or you can update your contact preferences. We promise to keep your details safe and secure. We won’t share your details outside of Nesta without your permission. Find out more about how we use personal information in our Privacy Policy.